User:CliffR

CliffR
My name is D.S. Livingstone but I prefer pseudonyms such as CliffR In the late nineties I commenced a memoir of unseemly and mostly hilarious circumstances and events over my lifetime called the ‘The CliffR Project’. For example I claim to be the only person in the world who turned down McDonalds for all of Canada, twice. The first time was in 1961 when McDonalds was just getting going in the US. And again in 1964 when a friend was getting ready to bring it into Canada. In early 1994 my brother and I lucked in and obtained the Internet domain name look.com when the Internet was still in its infancy. Look.com now currently appraises at over a million dollars. But as fate would have it, just when we were getting to cash it in as our retirement, a rouge partner up and stole it in 2003 and I am still fighting to get it back. Talk about grist for the mill. In late 1998, I put up a website about the book under cliffr.com. The book was published pro tem in 2004 in a limited release with the title, ‘The Incessant Knock of Opportunity’, which chronicled my seemingly countless blown or foibled opportunities over the years such as the above.

In March 2006, after nearly two years of successful searching for information in the Wikipedia, I finally decided to join as a contributor. In the mid sixties I had also became interested in things both esoteric and not all of the physical domain. Over the years I have amassed a considerable background of cross linked knowledge and references to such matters. To help sort out the countless opposing theories, conjectures, and interpretations, I go by a simple rule: ‘If two accounts differ, the one that is the most possible logically to be true, is the one most probably likely to be true’. For example, which has the lesser possibility of being true. That the 'Holy Grail' is a magical tin cup somewhere that never runs out and bestows everlasting life to anybody who drinks from it. Or, that the 'Holy Grail' is an induction center between your Pituitary and Pineal glands, which, when properly aligned, inducts higher frequency astrophysical radiations which have been referred to as Manna. Don't forget, the first is nothing more than Man's interpretations over the years of a statement made by Christ. The second is the interpretation taught by Melchizedek. The Revelatorium is a compendium of matters taught in accordance with Melchizedek. Most of the information cannot be verified in the way that the accuracy of a cut piece of 2x4 can be measured, but it satisfies the criterion of logical plausibility against the accepted norm in every single given case. Don't forget also that most of the esoteric items in the Wikipedia can't be verified for what they claim. It can only be verified that someone said it, and not even that in all cases.